Hours after Amiram Ben Uliel received three life sentences plus 20 years on Monday for the 2015 murder of three, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s son Yair criticized the conviction and retweeted a link to a crowdfunding page for his continued legal battle.
Ben Uliel killed three members of the Dawabsha family — Saad, Riham, and their 18-month-old son Ali — in an arson attack. Only the couple’s eldest son, Ahmed, survived, despite terrible burns and scarring; he was 5-years-old at the time.
Yair Netanyahu retweeted a link to “Honenu,” a far-right legal aid group that offers support to what they call “soldiers and civilians who find themselves in legal entanglements, due to defending themselves against Arab aggression, or due to their love for Israel.”
Critics on Twitter called Netanyahu’s retweet of the fundraiser “surreal,” especially in light of the fact that his father was set to sign normalization agreements with the UAE and Bahrain on Tuesday in Washington. Yair Netanyahu is accompanying his father on the trip to the US.
Yair Netanyahu responded by saying that the conviction was disgraceful and lacking in evidence. He also claimed that Ben Uliel’s confessions linking him to the crime were obtained by the Israeli security services through “physical torture in the most medieval fashion you can imagine.”
The younger Netanyahu maintains an outsize and inflammatory presence on social media, and has drawn praise from white nationalists after sharing an anti-Semitic meme. There are currently four defamation lawsuits pending against him.
Also in defense of Ben Uliel, around two dozen rabbis signed an open letter calling for his acquittal. The list included some of the biggest names in religious Zionism, including Beit El Chief Rabbi Shlomo Aviner, Safed Chief Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, Kiryat Arba Chief Rabbi Dov Lior, and Rabbi Zvi Tau.
“Nobody disputes that Amiram’s confession, the only piece of evidence against him, was extracted from him through the use of torture…that is enough to justify his release,” the letter said.
Yitzhak Bom, an attorney for Honenu, echoed that sentiment when he said, “Our problem, of course, is not with the sentence. The main problem is that the court has accepted confessions that were extracted either after torture or under fear of torture in order to convict him.”
Source: The Times of Israel